Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Author Topic: Will Amiga ever live again?  (Read 14956 times)

Description:

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Kronos

  • Resident blue troll
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Feb 2002
  • Posts: 4017
    • Show all replies
    • http://www.SteamDraw.de
Re: Will Amiga ever live again?
« on: March 28, 2004, 01:48:39 PM »
The A1000 was way ahead of its time in 1985, and that was still true
with the A500/2000 between 86 and 89.

The A1200 was anice speedup for the Amiga-freaks, but it was allready
failing behind in many aspects.

It only had 2mb of shared (slow) memory, while PCs could be brought up
to atleast 4MB (often 16) by just adding the ICs/SIMMs. And all of that was
running at full CPU-speed, and non-shared.
A HD-floppies were allready standard in PCs, while it required obscure and expensive
modified drives for the Amiga.

A HD was also standard in PCs, and could easily/cheaply be bought.
The A1200 only supported expensive and small 2.5" HDs. The adapters
to 3.5" only appaered in spring 93, and they still costed extra, and not all 3.5"-HDs
would worked with the A1200.

16Bit-Audio was also not uncommon in PCs of that day.
And a bog-standard VGA would crush AGA  for everything but 2D-games.

You are right about the OS.
1. Make an announcment.
2. Wait a while.
3. Check if it can actually be done.
4. Wait for someone else to do it.
5. Start working on it while giving out hillarious progress-reports.
6. Deny that you have ever announced it
7. Blame someone else
 

Offline Kronos

  • Resident blue troll
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Feb 2002
  • Posts: 4017
    • Show all replies
    • http://www.SteamDraw.de
Re: Will Amiga ever live again?
« Reply #1 on: March 28, 2004, 02:19:27 PM »
Wasn't one of your points that the Amiga was (mis-)labeled as a gaming
machine ?

And AA was a pain in the compared to VGA when you wanted to
to serious stuff (except video).

I did buy an A1200 in late 1992, and there way allmost no games for it,
and even most of the old ones didn't work.

I did build myself a 386DX40 in spring 93, and there was stuff like Tie-Fighter,
which blow most of the AA games out of the water.
1. Make an announcment.
2. Wait a while.
3. Check if it can actually be done.
4. Wait for someone else to do it.
5. Start working on it while giving out hillarious progress-reports.
6. Deny that you have ever announced it
7. Blame someone else